4.7 Article

Beyond sex and aggression: testosterone rapidly matches behavioural responses to social context and tries to predict the future

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0453

Keywords

testosterone; social behaviour; aggression; oxytocin; steroids

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The study found that testosterone can facilitate or inhibit prosocial behaviors depending on social context, and have rapid and prolonged effects on prosocial responses. This hormone also affects oxytocin signaling mechanisms which mediate its context-dependent behavioral influences.
Although androgens are widely studied in the context of aggression, androgenic influences on prosocial behaviours have been less explored. We examined testosterone's (T) influence on prosocial and aggressive responses in a positively valenced social context (interacting with a pairbond partner) and a negatively valenced context (interacting with an intruder) in socially monogamous Mongolian gerbils. T increased and decreased prosocial responses in the same individuals towards a pairbond partner and an intruder, respectively, both within 30 min, but did not affect aggression. T also had persistent effects on prosocial behaviour; males in which T initially increased prosocial responses towards a partner continued to exhibit elevated prosocial responses towards an intruder male days later until a second T injection rapidly eliminated those responses. Thus, T surges can rapidly match behaviour to current social context, as well as prime animals for positive social interactions in the future. Neuroanatomically, T rapidly increased hypothalamic oxytocin, but not vasopressin, cellular responses during interactions with a partner. Together, our results indicate that T can facilitate and inhibit prosocial behaviours depending on social context, that it can influence prosocial responses across rapid and prolonged time scales, and that it affects oxytocin signalling mechanisms that could mediate its context-dependent behavioural influences.

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